the final point needed to win a match (especially in tennis)
a cool, classically elegant and concise film that addresses all of the big questions--love, morality, death, fate, chance--without ever seeming heavy or self-conscious
The point in time in of a match when the leading player requires only one more point to win.
a situation when the player who is leading needs one more point to win the match
Point in which, by winning, one played can win the match
A point that, if won, wins the match.
Like in Tennis, the stage in the match that one player needs one more point to win the match.
When the serving player or team is going for the point that will win the match.
The point that decides the outcome of a match.
when a player just needs one point to win the match (like 40-30)
The point at which the leading player can win the match if the point is successful.
A time in the match when the leading player needs just one more point to win.
Match Point is an Academy Award-nominated 2005 film written and directed by Woody Allen and starring Jonathan Rhys-Meyers, Scarlett Johansson, Emily Mortimer, and Matthew Goode. Rhys-Meyers plays Chris Wilton, a tennis pro seeking a new direction for his life, who seems to find it all (friendship, a new career, love) when he meets the members of a wealthy British family. Mortimer and Goode play siblings in the family, and Johansson plays a struggling actress who is engaged to Goode's character.